Staff members are seen in a Louis Vuitton store in the Times Square shopping mall in the Causeway Bay district of Hong Kong on Jan 4, 2020. (PHOTO / AFP)

HONG KONG – Glitzy Hong Kong shopping streets once packed with luxury stores that attracted 56 million visitors in pre-pandemic 2019 now have about half of their shop units sitting vacant, according to property management companies.

High-end retail properties go vacant and famous foreign brands reduce exposure to the special administrative region – one of the world's top luxury shopping destinations – in favor of opening new outlets in the Chinese mainland.

Rents in Tsim Sha Tsui are down 41 percent from pre-pandemic levels, according to property firm Cushman & Wakefield, and last year the retail district was displaced as the world's most expensive shopping real estate by New York's Fifth Avenue.

Canton Road, the most famous shopping street in Tsim Sha Tsui, has a vacancy rate of about 53 percent, according to global property company Savills.

READ MORE: HK has to step up to remain 'top shopping paradise', says survey

"Most luxury retailers don't think Hong Kong will return to the dizzy levels of 2014 when the market here peaked," said Simon Smith, Savills' senior director of research and consultancy in Hong Kong.

"If you walk around the major shopping areas you won't see the queues outside luxury boutiques or if you do they are very short.”

Macao is another tax free destination and Hainan is duty free. Yet, you don't find the breadth and depth of mono-brand stores in Hainan that you can find in Hong Kong.

Luca Solca, Sanford C. Bernstein

In place of stores shut by Tiffany, Valentino, Burberry and other big brands over the last three years, including in Tsim Sha Tsui, Central and Causeway Bay shopping districts, pharmacies and sports apparel outlets for brands like Adidas and Sweaty Betty have moved in.

Luxury and big brand retail companies mentioned in the story did not respond to requests for comment.

The store closures came after the 2019 social unrest that followed pushed sales into a slump which worsened during the three years of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Over that period, Hong Kong suffered around a 30 percent plunge in overall retail sales compared to 2018 levels, largely due to a tumble in mainland visitors because of travel restrictions. Tourists from the mainland are the main driver of Hong Kong's branded retail and luxury goods market.

Hong Kong retail data doesn't break out luxury goods separately but the sector was hit hard as the mainland accounted for almost 80 percent of inbound tourists in 2019. Jewelry, watches, clocks and valuable gifts sales in 2022 at HK$38.8 billion ($4.9 billion), for instance, were less than half their 2018 value.

ALSO READ: HK retailers bite the bullet as industry braces for the worst

And while inbound travelers in January tripled from December as COVID restrictions were lifted and travel resumed, arrivals were still only about 10 percent of 2019 levels.

Morgan Stanley forecast Hong Kong visitor numbers this year will reach just 70 percent of 2018 arrivals. It estimates retail sales will grow 15 percent, holding at around 80 percent of retail trade from the pre-COVID year.

A woman walks past a high end fashion store in the Causeway Bay district of Hong Kong on May 23, 2020. (PHOTO / AFP)

Many more alternatives

Many luxury brands expanded in the mainland during the pandemic, opening stores in far-flung locations to reach consumers unable to travel. 

"(Hong Kong) will never be back to the level it was, like a decade ago, when it was the only, I would say, duty-free location where Chinese would go," L'Oreal CEO Nicolas Hieronimus told Reuters.

"Now they have many more options."

Duty free malls in Hainan, where tourists are the main customers, reported an 84 percent jump in sales in 2021, the latest data from consultancy Bain & Co showed, outpacing the mainland's average growth rate of 36 percent in luxury sales for that year.

READ MORE: HK protests bring more pain as mainland shoppers stay away

Hainan also accounted for 13 percent of the mainland domestic luxury spend in 2021 versus 6 percent pre-pandemic, and tax regulations are set to ease further, allowing more duty-free stores to open. 

People walk past an Adidas sportswear store in Hong Kong, March 27, 2021. (PHOTO / AP)

That helped mainland's domestic luxury sales double to 471 billion yuan ($68.8 billion) in 2021 from 2019, according to Bain. That outstripped total Hong Kong retail sales from a peak hit in 2013 at HK$494.5 billion ($63.0 billion), according to the city's statistics department.

This imbalance in favor of increasing sales in the mainland had big luxury brands opening stores across the country over the last few years, according to filings and company websites.

Hermes, with 27 stores in the mainland, opened a new, enlarged store in Nanjing in January, relocating to upscale mall Deji Plaza. It first opened a store in 2010 in the eastern city.

ALSO READ: New dawn as Hong Kong scraps almost all COVID curbs

Gucci owner Kering opened nine boutiques in the mainland in 2021; upscale men's suitmaker Brioni opened stores in Chengdu, Wuhan and Shenzhen; jeweler Boucheron opened two mainland stores.

Saint Laurent, another Kering brand, opened its first flagship stores in Shanghai and Beijing in 2019. The group's jeweler Qeelin has also been expanding in the mainland and opened its largest flagship store in Shanghai in 2021.

In this Nov 29, 2018 photo, Chinese mainland tourists walk pas a Gucci shop on Canton Road, the one-stop-shop high street of high-end brands in Hong Kong. (PHOTO / AP)

Despite the increasing investment in the mainland, some are still hopeful about the long-term outlook for Hong Kong as global economies and holiday travel recover.

"Macao is another tax free destination and Hainan is duty free. Yet, you don't find the breadth and depth of mono-brand stores in Hainan that you can find in Hong Kong," Luca Solca, managing director for luxury goods at investment management firm Sanford C. Bernstein, told Reuters.

"Hong Kong remains very attractive for Chinese consumers."